July/August 2006 issue
Staying power

Mick James
Business continuity is what it's all about. Here are some
new ideas on the oldest topic in business.
Fire, flood, famine, disease-it seems the world is becoming a more
dangerous place. For once the facts back it up. According to the
University of Louvain's Centre for Research on the Epidemiology
of Disasters (CRED) there were 360 natural disasters in 2005, up
from 305 the year before.
Combined with very real threats from avian 'flu and terrorism, the
headlines have brought business continuity to the top of the business
agenda once more. Last year, a survey of UK businesses by accountants
Deloitte & Touche found that more than 83% of businesses had
corporate business continuity plans, which seems impressive at first
glance.
But how relevant are these continuity plans to today's changed circumstances?
A more recent survey by the London Chambers of Commerce found that
only 30% of the capital's firms had updated their contingency plans
in the light of bird 'flu, and still fewer had tested them. So,
is business continuity keeping pace, not just with the changing
threat landscape, but the changing realities of business?
“Traditionally the focus of business continuity has been about
seeking out the likely vulnerabilities, the single point of failure,”
says Justin Clarke, senior consultant with BT's business continuity
practice. “Now our means of production have changed-it's not
necessarily a riskier world but the nature of the risk has shifted.
It's no longer the manufacturing plant that's vulnerable, it's the
just-in-time systems.”
Clarke believes that networked IT should no longer be seen as just
part of the risk but as an enabler of business continuity. “We
have all these devices-telephones, the internet, PDAs, faxes,”
he says. “If you know you depend on them, you can build in
the resilience. Then you can elevate them and make them part of
the business continuity plan.”
Social distance
With 'social distancing' measures-closing offices and schools and
restricting travel-a distinct possibility in the event of a 'flu
pandemic, traditional recovery plans may be outflanked by the sheer
inability to get people together in one place. Remote working could
then come into its own, provided companies have already taken the
time to establish the training, infrastructure, security and health
and safety measure associated with it.
“You can't just expect this to work at the flick of a switch,”
says Clarke. “We don't want people to buy a 'pandemic 'flu
solution' that just sits there and when the 'flu hits you hit the
switch.”
Instead, businesses need to start building remote working into their
everyday working lives and enjoying all the benefits that flow from
it, whether disaster occurs or not.
“If something does happen, people can be more flexible,”
says Clarke. “After the London bombings, people could have
got back to work the next day, although it would have been difficult.
But people didn't want to. With the option to work from home the
company can consider in a more compassionate manner the psychological
effects of the disaster on people.”
Remote working obviously brings with it security and vigilance issues.
This is why firms such as banks have frowned on it. But now, for
example, it is feasible to extend call-recording economically to
remote locations. Security measures that separate ID processes from
the underlying technology, such as log-in via mobile phone, can
make even an internet café a reasonably secure environment.
Clarke believes this is a real opportunity for security professionals
to embed effective security measures in the organisation. “All
too often security professionals are told to go off and do something
about security, but when they come back and say it will cost this
much and cause this much disruption, they're told to get lost,"
he says. "But using business continuity disciplines, analyzing
the impact of losing various functions, they can build an investment
case for security measures.”
Chris Mayers, information security architect at Citrix agrees. “This
is a big opportunity for IT security professionals to step up here,”
he says. “A well-run IT security organisation has a lot to
offer here. They understand how the business processes work, and
if they are well plugged-in to how the business works they will
know how to keep it running.”
This may involve taking on additional responsibilities, such as
physical security. “You can see how, under disaster conditions,
physical security is a real problem. But you also have to look at
the physical security in the back-up location,” he says.
“Crisis management means thinking creatively about how to
deal with the unforeseen. When things don't pan out as you expected,
you may need more general solutions. There's a need for awareness
not just about what keeps IT running but what keeps the business
running as a whole.”
This means thinking about continuity, not as a one-off project,
but a process that becomes part of the fabric of the organisation.
“Some people still look at it has having a crisis policy,
but some companies have turned the corner and it's now pervasive
in the culture of everything they do,” says Brian O'Gilvie,
business continuity and availability solutions manager for Hewlett-Packard's
EMEA division.
Keep on trucking
Many organizations have now realized that continuity is now an integral
part of the way they do business. O'Gilvie cites the work that Barclaycard
has put into its authorization system, or DHL's promise to customers
that they can track their packages worldwide, 24/7.
“Businesses are geared differently; this is now about competitive
advantage, about having the people and the systems and the process
to be the smartest operator in your market,” he says.
And this is not just about surviving the major catastrophes. “An
outage that may last a week is seen as really risky,” he says.
“But how many times are you down for operator error or virus
threats or even maintenance. That's all seen by the customer as
a pain in the neck. By the time you add up all these disruptions
you realize they are killing you.”
This sort of customer-focused thinking is key to getting risk back
onto the C-level agenda. "We don't talk so much about risk
as the enablement of trust. This is what contributes to business
value,” says Mark Jones, director of Atos Origin's security
and risk practice. That means the appropriate management of risk
so that trust isn't compromised.
He cites as an example the Gate Gourmet industrial dispute and its
knock-on effects at both BAA and BA. “The provision of sandwiches
isn't core to BA. The disaster recovery specialists didn't look
at Gate Gourmet, but look at the actual impact on BA. It was enormous,
and it was all about the undermining of trust.”
With more and more services outsourced or subcontracted, the interdependence
of companies means that the focus of business continuity has moved
out into supply chain relationships. It's not enough to have contracts
that allow you to sue or prosecute suppliers when the consequences
of an interruption in supply can be many times any likely damages
or fine.
Supply chain
As continuity of supply becomes more and more crucial, business
continuity becomes a matter of good governance internally and competitive
advantage externally. “Companies are missing a trick if they
don't look at the supply chain in terms of business continuity,”
says Jones. “Business continuity gives suppliers the opportunity
to say, we have appropriate measures in place, we've had them audited,
your services are safe and we will continue to be a reliable supplier.”
Despite the increasing interdependence of businesses, many continuity
plans are developed in isolation-even in the sort of multi-tenanted
buildings commonly found in the City of London.
“If other businesses around you are confused, it can disrupt
your execution,” says Nick Beale, managing director of CitySafe,
the technology company that runs the CommunitySafe extranet. CommunitySafe
provides emergency planning information to London, and will soon
come to other cities.
“We try to engage with as wide a community as possible, and
we've set up a secure group system that allows organizations to
conducted anonymized exercises. So the head of a bank doesn't have
to come out in public and say, 'I don't know what to do about this'.”
The exercises solve the problem of getting senior staff together
to test continuity plans by sending out email 'injects'. These are
updates on an unfolding disaster scenario. Members of the group
can walk through their responses when they have an opportunity.
This is backed up by chatrooms and an 'ask the expert' facility.
“It's often very hard to get to the right person to inform
the actual plan,” says Beale. “The system fields a question,
for example about access to power or water and so forth, feeds it
to an expert and it's captured in a FAQ” The idea is to harness
best
practices and then disseminate them to smaller organizations in
more digestible form.
“The further down the scale you get the less is done in terms
of business continuity,” says Beale. “We aim to capture
some of the best tips and tricks and push them out. The idea of
the exercise system is to share information and to get businesses
to engage with each other.” •
About the author
Mick James is a freelance journalist who contributes to a number
of publications in the areas of management, consultancy, finance
and IT.
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